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GP 202 Reservoir Geomechanics Spring 2014, OpenEdX Homework 1 Calculating Overburden Stress Due April 14, 2014

Please direct any questions to the forum on the OpenEdX Courseware page

Background In this assignment, you will be calculating the vertical stress, Sv, and the formation porosity, , for two different data sets, one from the Barnett Shale, TX, and the other from an offshore well in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM). Both these data sets will also be used in future homework assignments and can be downloaded by clicking the right tab on the top of this page. Utilize a scientific computing or plotting program such as Microsoft Excel or MATLAB to follow the steps below. Then, answer the questions on the page below.

Instructions Part 1: Compute the overburden stress and overburden gradients a. Plot density vs. depth for each dataset. It is conventional to put depth on an inverted y-axis and density on the x-axis. Use 10.0 m/s2 to approximate g, acceleration due to gravity. Notice that the density measurements are not continuous to the surface. For the Barnett data, assume a reasonable density for sediments at the Earths surface and extrapolate by whichever method to the first measurement point. For the GOM data, since the well is offshore, use a density of 1.0 g/cc from the surface to the sea floor (1000 ft) and a density of 1.7 g/cc for the shallowest seafloor sediments. Again extrapolate from this point to the first point in the data set. b. Divide the density profiles into 5 blocks. By considering the variations of density in each profile, designate 5 blocks representing sections of approximately constant density. Compute the average density in each block and plot blocked density vs. depth for each data set. c. Calculate the overburden stress. Calculate and plot the overburden stress for each data set using both the continuous and blocked density profiles. On the same plots, show the hydrostatic pore pressure for each case.

d. Calculate the overburden gradient (overburden stress normalized by depth). Calculate and plot the overburden gradient for each data set using both the continuous and blocked density profiles.

Part 2: Compute porosity from density logs a. Compute porosity assuming complete saturation and hydrostatic pore pressure.

log = (1-)matrix + fluid


where log is the log density, is the porosity, matrix is the density of the sedimentary reservoir rock (use 2.7 g/cc), and fluid is density of the pore fluid (use 1.0 g/cc).

b. Plot porosity vs. depth for each dataset. Calculate and plot the porosity for each data set using both the continuous and blocked density profiles.

Part 3: Answer the questions on the page below Use the plots and calculations from Parts 1 and 2 to answer the questions on the page below. The answers will be posted after the due date. Numerical entry type responses have only a range of acceptable values and are graded electronically, so please adhere to the value of constants given here to prevent misgrading of your submissions.

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